The late
Lieutenant-General J.M. Macintyre, R.A.,
Inverness Courier, Dec. 30, 1902, p. 6a.
"Lieutenant-General John McKenzie Macintyre of Meadowbank, Fortrose,
passed away on the night of Christmas Day. The remains were conveyed to
Inverness yesterday, and were interred in Tomnahurich Cemetery, a spot
for which he entertained the highest admiration. General Macintyre was
born in London in 1827, being the eldest son of Mr D. Macintyre,
Calcutta, and Mrs Margaret Macintyre, née Miss Mackenzie of Kinoraig and
Redcastle. The General's connection with Fortrose was lengthened and
intimate. His deceased mother and for a time his uncle (the late Colonel
Hugh Mackenzie) resided in Meadowbank, while another uncle (the late
Colonel Hector Mackenzie) resided in Mackenzie Lodge. Mackenzie Lodge is
at present the residence of the brother of deceased, Major-General D.
Macintyre, V.C., author of 'Hindu Koh' and 'Wanderings and Wild Sport on
and beyond the Himalayas.' General Macintyre was brother-in-law to the
late Surgeon- Major Wm. Brydon, C. B., the survivor in the disastrous
retreat from Cabul in 1842. The late General received his military
training at Addiscombe, and obtained a commission as Second-Lieutenant
in the Madras Royal Artillery on 13th of June 1845. He was promoted
Lieutenant in May 1849. He served through most of the Crimean War, and
was attached to the Ottoman Army in 1855-6, serving with the local rank
of Captain. He joined the Kertch Expedition as a Brigade -Major, and
received the medal with clasp for Sebastopol. General Macintyre
accompanied the army of Omar Pasha to Asia Minor, and went through the
winter campaign there, including the Battle of the Ingour. In this
conflict, Capt. Dymock, 95th Foot, having been killed, the young officer
was appointed aide-de-camp to Sir Lintorn Simmons, the British
Commander. He served with eminent ability in this capacity till April
1858, and received cordial acknow- ledgments of his services from the
British Commander, when that officer resigned his post. In August 1858
he was gazetted Captain, having previously received the Turkish medal
and the fifth class of the Medjidie. In 1860 Captain Macintyre was in
command of a mountain train battery in the China Expedition of that
year. He was also present at the defence of Shanghai in those memorable
three August days when the rebel army, commanded by Chung Wong, made its
fierce attack. Captain Macintyre personally laid a mountain train
howitzer on this occasion, and by a well-directed shell he wounded the
Commander-in Chief, in addition to killing and wounding several of his
staff. During the defence, as Senior Officer of Artillery, he was in
command of the South Gate Post, the principal mark of the rebels. For
his brave conduct he was mentioned in despatches, besides receiving the
medal for the Expedition. Subsequently, General Macintyre served for
many years in India. In February 1870 he was promoted to the rank of
Lieutenant-Colonel, to a Colonelcy in February 1875, and to the rank of
Major-General in December 1878. In April 1889 he retired from the army
with the rank of Lieutenant-General. Since his retirement General
Macintyre resided at Fortrose, where the members of his family had spent
their youth. The General soon became a well-known figure, as he always
wore the Highland dress. He was a member of the Highland Club in
Inverness, and of the Junior Conservative Club, London. He was also a
J.P. for Ross-shire. For several years he was a member of Rosemarkie
Parish Council. In the Fortrose and Rosemarkie Golf Club, of which he
was President, he took a warm interest. He was also an ardent supporter
of the volunteer movement, and his sympathies were expressed in a
substantial manner during the late South African war. In the times of
peace he was a ready and generous benefactor, and conferred his aid in a
quiet and unostentatious manner. General Macintyre was predeceased by
his wife -- an amiable and accomplished lady, whose memory is still
fragrant in Fortrose. They are survived by three daughters and three
sons. Major Donald, the eldest, is in command of the 1st Battalion 2nd
Gurkhas at the Imperial Camp, Delhi. The eldest daughter is Mrs. Wade,
London, wife of Mr J. E. Wade, the famous sculptor, who has recently
executed several Royal orders. The second daughter, Miss Marguerite
Macintyre, is the well-known Scottish prima donna, whose musical success
has been achieved not only in her native country, but all over Europe
and in South America and Africa."
MACINTYRE, DONALD
(1831–1903), major-general Bengal staff corps, born at Kincraig House,
Ross-shire, on 12 Sept. 1831, was second son of Donald Macintyre of
Calcutta by his wife Margaret, daughter of John Mackenzie of Kincraig
House, Ross-shire. Educated at private schools in England and abroad, he
was at the East India Company's Military College, Addiscombe, from 1848
to 1850, obtained his first commission in the Bengal army on 14 June
1850.
With the 66th Gurkhas he served under Sir Colin Campbell, afterwards
Lord Clyde [q. v.] in the two expeditions of 1852 against the hill
tribes on the Peshawar frontier, including the destruction of the
fortified village of Pranghur and the action at Ishkakot. He also joined
the expeditionary force against the Boree Afridis in Nov. 1853. In 1856
he took part with the 66th Gurkhas in the expedition under Sir Neville
Chamberlain [q. V. Suppl. II] to Kuram Valley, Afghanistan, and with the
Doaba field force in Peshawar Valley in 1864, receiving the medal with
clasp. He was made lieutenant on 23 Nov. 1856. During 1857 and 1858,
when engaged in raising an extra Gurkha regiment (now the 4th Gurkhas),
he took part in protecting the hill passes on the Kale Kumaon frontier
from the Rohilkund rebels and in keeping the district in order. For
these services he was awarded a medal. He was promoted captain in June
1862 and major on 14 June 1870. He served with the Lushai expedition in
1871-2, being several times mentioned in despatches, and being made
brevet lieut.-colonel on 11 Sept. 1872. For an act of gallantry in this
campaign, at the storming of the stockaded village of Lalgnoora on 4
Jan. 1872, he received the Victoria Cross. Macintyre, who was serving as
second in command to Colonel (Sir) Herbert Macpherson, C.B., V.C.,
commanding the 2nd Gurkhas, while leading the assault, was the first to
reach the stockade, which was from 8 to 9 feet high. To climb over it
and disappear among the flames and smoke of the burning village was the
work of a very short time. The stockade was successfully stormed by
Macintyre under the heaviest fire which the Lushai delivered that day.
Macintyre, who became lieut.-colonel on 14 Jan. 1876 and colonel on 1
Oct. 1887, commanded the 2nd Prince of Wales's Own Gurkhas with Sir
Garnet Wolseley's force at the occupation of Cyprus and also with the
Khyber column, directed against the Zakha Khel Afridis, in the Afghan
war of 1878-9. He was also in both expeditions to the Bazar Valley under
Lieut.-general Sir Francis Maude, V.C. (medal). He retired with the rank
of major-general on 24 Dec. 1880, and thenceforth lived at Mackenzie
Lodge, Fortrose, Ross-shire. Macintyre, who was a traveller and
sportsman, published an account of his experiences in 'Hindu Koh,
Wanderings and Wild Sports on and beyond the Himalayas' (1889; new edit.
1891). He was a J.P. for Ross-shire and an F.R.G.S. He died at Fortrose
on 15 April 1903 and was buried in Rosemarkie churchyard. He married
Angehca, daughter of the Rev. T. J. Patteson, Kirmetties, Forfar.
Capt D.G.F.W.
Macintyre DSO, DSC, RN
Donald Macintyre known to his fellow officers as D. Mac was one of the
most successful wartime COs of convoy escorts in the Battle of the
Atlantic credited with sinking at least seven U-boats, including U-99
commanded by Otto Kretschmer, the most successful U-boat commander of
them all. His utobiography, U-Boat Killer, is perhaps the best account
of the war against the U-boats by a serving officer. He went on to write
many more books on the Battle of the Atlantic.
Donald George Frederick Wyville Macintyre was born at Dehra Dun, the son
of a major general in the Indian Army, on the 26 January 1904. He
attended a preparatory school in Cheltenham and the Royal Navy College
Osborne before joining the Royal Navy as a fourteen year old cadet at
Dartmouth in 1917.
See
http://www.holywellhousepublishing.co.uk/Macintyre.html for more
information
Bob
McIntyre: Scottish racer's historic 101mph TT lap marked on 60th
anniversary
The
achievement of a Scottish racer who became the first man to lap the Isle
of Man TT course at more than 100mph will be celebrated on the 60th
anniversary.
The late Bob McIntyre set the milestone lap on the event's 50th
anniversary in 1957 on a red and white Gilera machine.
Manx racer Geoff Duke had recommended the Italian team signed him up
after he was injured at Imola.
McIntyre became the first man to average more than 100mph for a lap on
way to victory in the Senior race.
In fact, the then 28-year-old went above 100mph on four of the eight
laps - with his quickest of 101.12mph coming on his fourth lap of the
37-mile course.
See
http://www.bbc.com/sport/motorsport/41023073 for more information.
Sir John McIntyre
(24 April 1832 – 18 January 1904) was a Scottish born Australian politician
and businessman.